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Graybeal, Carolyn M. – 1980
The ability of language impaired children to remember and retell two stories within their lexical and syntactic grasp was investigated with 12 language handicapped and 12 normal children (7 to 9 years old). An audiotape of the child's retelling of the stories was analyzed in terms of accurate recall, plausible information added during recall,…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Error Patterns, Language Handicaps
Cramer, Phebe – 1974
If older children automatically label pictorial stimuli, then their performance should be impaired on tasks in which such labeling would increase the error rate. Children were asked to learn pairs of verbal or pictorial stimuli which, when combined, formed a different compound word (BUTTER-FLY). Subsequently, a false recognition test that included…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Elementary School Students, Error Patterns
Schnurr, Paula; Morris, William N. – 1982
A study was conducted to explore the generality of reconstructive processes of memory for social information. Sixty college students divided evenly into six experimental and control groups were asked to read one of two versions of a story: one in which a couple happily agreed not to have children, the other in which the man's desire to remain…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Error Patterns, Higher Education, Memory
Lindauer, Barbara K.; Paris, Scott G. – 1975
This paper focuses on a study which replicates and extends earlier work employing a recognition memory paradigm to investigate children's memory and developmental changes in dominant word associations. On the recognition test the implicit associative response can lead to better memory for the original items (this is the hit rate), and it can also…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Cognitive Development, Elementary School Students, Error Patterns
Madden, David J.; Mitchell, David B. – 1983
In recent research, two qualitatively different classes of mental operations have been identified. The performance of one type of cognitive task requires attention, in the sense of mental effort, for its execution, while the second type can be performed automatically, independent of attentional control. Further research has shown that automatic…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Aging (Individuals), Attention, Cognitive Processes
Hardison, Debra M. – 1992
A study investigated the role of pragmatics, the factors that govern choice of language in social interaction, on interpretation of elliptical verb phrases (VPs) in spoken English by learners of English as a Second Language (ESL). Ellipsis requires the listener to recall the surface form of a presupposed element and to integrate it into the…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, English (Second Language), Error Patterns, Language Research